<p>Paul Furneret a young artist working in Paris in 1901 is invited to attend a s&eacute;ance at Camille Flammarion&rsquo;s observatory after having participated in an experiment in &ldquo;automatic drawing&rdquo; at another s&eacute;ance a week earlier in which he drew a picture while unconscious under hypnosis of a young woman recognized by one of the participants as his dead daughter.&nbsp;</p><p>Paul&rsquo;s friend Victor Marvaud is unable to accompany him as arranged because a ship carrying another of their friends Gaston Lambrunet has struck a rock in the Channel and although all the passengers have been put into lifeboats the one containing Gaston&rsquo;s mother and sister has not yet reached land. Victor insists however that Flammarion&rsquo;s s&eacute;ance is too important for him to miss and in order to make sure that he gets there&nbsp;has asked his physician Antoine Cros to take Paul to the observatory in his stead.</p><p>The skeptical Cros is also escorting the writer Jane de La Vaud&egrave;re who has previously taken part in Flammarion&rsquo;s experiments and the two of them provide Paul with a great deal of food for thought on the journey. Their contrasted perspectives become all the more significant when Paul hypnotized by a &ldquo;magnetizer&rdquo; named Madame Zosima produces four images including one of Gaston&rsquo;s sister whose lifeboat still has not landed yet Dr. Cros&rsquo;s late brother Charles and a woman tentatively identified as Jane&rsquo;s long-dead mother.&nbsp;</p><p>Cros tries hard to provide a naturalistic explanations of what Paul has done but the uncertainty as to the fate of the lifeboat turns&nbsp;Paul&rsquo;s artwork and its apparent supernatural nature into headline news spurring the participants in the s&eacute;ance to meet up again in Dr. Cros&rsquo;s house the following night in order to discuss the implications of Paul&rsquo;s seeming ability to draw the dead albeit unconsciously.</p><p>A second experiment produces even more challenging results which throw Paul&rsquo;s life into dire confusion nearly cost a young model her life and also affect the lives of his new acquaintances&nbsp;leaving Paul with difficult dilemmas to address and an intriguing metaphysical mystery to resolve...</p><p><br />Brian M. Stableford has been a professional writer since 1965. He has published more than 60 science fiction and fantasy novels as well as several authoritative non-fiction books. He is also translating the works of Paul F&eacute;val and other French writers of the fantastique for Black Coat Press which also published his most two recent fantasy novels: The New Faust at the Tragicomique and The Stones of Camelot.</p>